Newspaper Page Text
BeraM anfl jjdoeriisgr.
NEWNAN, F RI D A Y, A U G. 1.
0 DOLLAR A YEAR.
The Immanuel Movement.
Rev. Samuel McCombs in Everybody's Magazine.
I will now briefly describe our meth
od of applying questions to the alcohol
ic habit. After a rigid medical exmina-
tion and while physical complications,
Perhaps John Is Still Running. The Diamond Remains A Mystery.
Atlanta Georgian.
She is pretty and winsome and with
it all mischievous, and it was this that
Franklin Clark in Everybody's Magazine
As a substance, the diamond is one
of the mysteries of nature, one of the
prompted her to play a little prank that | despairs of science. Nobody knows
had all of the marks of a near-tragedy,
K i s s.
l bllas.
STOI. K N
dus—a momcnl
v should memory rim it
;itK RlimiMi* of paradiHt
hin your strtr-H. .-vcs
uld I help but do it?
kiss that t.uitfht me thl
if there are any, are being attended to, though even the thought of
bloodshe
the patient is admitted for treatment.
It is necessary that he should not be
under the influence of alcohol at the
time, since the poison acts against the
was foreign to her motive. It was all fun
to Mary—that may be her name—but
it caused her best beau much discom-
j flture and brought a rather sensational
> pining
fhat love? can litfht the* dnrke
Phut love run point the primro
Of beauty's own designing.
Hold was my hear
But, ah, ho
When 1 looked in t h
And pour
nd i
. pair it.
How to Get the Most From Cowpeas.
A. L. French In Progressive Funner.
In just the proportion that we in
crease the acreage of the cowpeas, in
that proportion will the soils of our
section be increased in fertility.
With us, it usually follows a winter
grazing crop that has been sown on
corn stubble, but we arc not averse to
turning a good sod of clover and timo
thy, and often do this, plowing the sod
in the late winter. Then as soon as
the corn crop is planted, we start to
harrowing the pea land. And the deep
er the plowing is done and the better
the seed bed is prepared, the better re
sult we obtain in the pea crop. No crop
we have tried will respond better to
good treatment than will the pea crop.
We uually prepare the land well with
the Acme disc, and spike-tooth harrow ;
sow the peas broadcast by hand and cul
tivate them in with the spring-tooth
cultivator. Then level the land with
the smoothing harrow.
On our best land we generally use
three-fourths to one bushel per acre of
good clean Clay peas and a peck of
amber cane seed. This makes the best
combination for cow feed of anything
we have ever used. On the thinner
fields, where we sow the peas for soil
improvement primarily, we use the pea
alone, broadcast, one bushel per acre.
Then where we want the crop to be
grazed by hogs we put the peas in rows
two feet apart. We plant these with
our two-row corn-planter.
When we have grown a crop of pea-
vines that will make as fine a quality
of hay as we have ever been privileged
to feed, we make hay of it, every acre.
We have never been able to figure out
the economy of making manure direct
from peavines. when every ton of pea
hay is worth fifteen dollars when fed
to first-class cattle or sheep, and the
manurial value of the product reduced
very little by being passed through the
animal. When we can make hay of pea-
vines at a cost of from $1 to SI.50 per
ton and return the manure back to the
land for 2, r >c. per ton, we believe it is
good business to do so rather than to
plow under the crop in the raw state
and just bury S)3.25 with each ton so
plowed under. Doesn’t the proposition
look reasonable?
So we put the big six-foot mower
into the pea field when the pods are
getting brown, let the hay He in the
swath until thoroughly wilted, then
rake into good sized windrows and
leave until prettv well cured. If the
i nervous calm and quiet necessary
I the acceptance of the suggestions, lie !
is then either slightly hypnotized or
put into a very calm, passive, relaxed |
condition. In this state, l suggest to ;
; him that he can abstain if he will;
j that henceforth drink v/ill cease to be
a temptation ; or that, should tempta-
j tion arise, it will be slight and his will
j power will be greater than it. I tell
j him that his reason and conscience con
demn his habit and that, therefore, his
will must arouse itself to carry out the
commands of his higher nature.
Should the patient he exposed to ex
ceptional temptation, I suggest that he
will associate the thought of drinking
alcohol with a sense of nausea—that
spirits will make him vomit. If the pa
tient complains of feelings of depres
sion, especially in the morning, I sug
gest to him that he will have no more
desire to drink in the morning, be
cause he will then feel strong and not
depressed. I am in the habit of causing
the patient to turn my suggestion into
an auto-suggestion; that is, when I
say: "You will drink no more alco
hol,” ask him to make a vow to him
self, "I will drink no more alcohol.”
It is by this means that the initiative
of the individual is secured and his will
power developed.
Thus, in suggestion, one substitutes
a new emotional complex for an old
one, and the new complex results in al
tered conduct. In some way not yet
explained by science, these suggestions
are accepted by the subconscious ele
ment in the mind and leads to corres
ponding mental and physiological reac
tion. My experience convinces me that
hypnotic suggestion is of distinct value
as a help to the moral reform of the
drunkard, because it breaks the power
of the habit and gives a chance for
more distinctly ethical forces to work.
It would, however, be ill-judged to ex
pect from it more than it can do. Of
itself, it can do something; but for the
best results, its power requires to he
supplemented by other agencies.
for i ending to what had been a most pleas-
The Over-Tidy Wife.
Lottie* Aitc Weir in Now Orleans States.
There are wives who are overtidy ;
who set the house betore its dwellers
and forget that the body is more than
raiment. In the home over which the
overtidy wife presides, it is perpetual
cleaning day.
She resembles the old woman who
was so neat that she scrubbed the floor
through and fell into the cellar.
There is never a place where her
husband can be at peace in all his
house. He is not allowed to drink out
of the polished goblets, nor come into
the newly-swept house by the front
door, nor lean his head against the
wall, nor put is feet upon the sofa, nor
smoke anywhere. She does not like
weather continues fair, hunch and haul j utter of newspapers about, nor to have
to the barn at once, hut if rain threat
ens, cock up into large, high cocks and
leave them alone until the weather
clears, when the cocks are taken apart,
sunned and aired and sent to the barn
with a rush.
How to Get Rid of Galls and Gullies.
Raleigh (N. C.) Progressive Former.
Whenever we see a galled spot or
a gulley, hare of vegetation, we can’t
help wondering how many land-owners
can get his consent to permit the con
tinuance of such conditions. The lon
ger they exist the worse thev become.
Whv should any farmer permit himself
to be robbed of his “stock in trade,”
his capital, his farm? Furthermore,
the time lost through the necessity of
more frequent turns, or in working
over and around them, rightiy em
ployed. would prevent their existence
or restore them to a useful condition
after they have been formed. We do
not believe in filling gullies with rails,
brush, or other materials which are \
likely to be in the way later on. For
gullies or galled spots the best reme
dy is straw, coarse stable manure or
some other material that will improve
their fertility. Follow this with some
growing crop. If a gully, plow dirt
into it, turn the excess of water in an
other direction and sow peas; if a
galled spot, plow deeply and keep
something growing on it all the time.
We have seen gullies ten feet deep
filled and brought up to the most pro
ductive parts of the field in three or
four years by a liberal application of
straw, leaves, or coarse stable manure
and the sowing of cowpeas. It will
pay to fill them up for the crops they
will bring, and if the fields are to he
put in condition for the use of the im
plements necessary for economical cul
tivation, these scarred and gullied
fielts, so common in many parts of the
South, must he made to disappear.
Shake Into Your Shoes
Allen’s Foot-Ease, a powder. It cures
painful, swollen, smarting, nervous
feet and instantly takes the sting out
of corns and bunions and makes walk
ing easy. Trv it tn-dav. Sold every
where. Sample FREE. Address, Al
len S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
A truck has wheels
den truck.
unless it is gar-
the books taken down from the case.
She hates to see the parlor blinds
drawn up, and likes a religious gloom
all over the house.
Above all things she detests whit
tling. hammering and whipping. She
makes him put his shaving paper in a
tin box and fold his clothes away in a
bureau drawer when he goes to bed.
As long as he is in the house she dogs
his footsteps with broom and duster,
feeling quite sure that he is at least
made of dust, and to dust he will re
turn.
it never surprises me to hear that
the husband of that sort of a woman is
out a great deal, for men will have
t reedom somew here.
A certain lad.v in Paris gives period
ical dinners, at which assemble most of
the best-known wits and literati of the
day. The rule of the mansion is that
while one person discourses, no inter
ruption whatever can be permitted. It
is said that M. Renan once attended
one of these dinners, and, being in ex
cellent vein, talked without a break
during the whole repast. Towards the
end of the dinner a guest was heard to
commence a sentence: hut he was in
stantly silenced by the hostess. After
they had left the table, however, she
at once informed the extinguished in
dividual that, as M. Renan had now
finished his conversation, she would
gladly hear what he had to say.
The guest modestly declined: the
hostess insisted.
“I am certain it was something of
consequence,” she said.
“Alas, madame,” he answered, ‘‘it
was, indeed; hut now it is too late! I
should have liked a little more of that
iced pudding.”
"Grass widow” is not necessarily a
slang term. It appears in the marriage
register of Halstead. Essex, England,
as early as 1654. It is said to be a cor
ruption of "grace widow” and dates
from the days when divorces were
granted only by the authority of the
church. The woman who was so em
powered to separate from her husband
was commonly called a grace widow,
and from this the expression gradually
gained its present meaning and spell
ing.
ant evening.
John—we’ll call him by that name in
the story had been calling on Mary on
this particular night and was preparing
to leave. They had reached the front
door and John suddenly bent over and
kissed her. Whether this was the first
time he had turned this trick history
fails to state. At any rate, Mary
blushed and exclaimed:
"John, how dare you? I’m a good j
mind to call papa.”
“Oh, go on and call him. See if I
care,” bravely responded John as he
planted another smack on those cherry*
colored lips. Just then the girl pre
tended she heard her father calling and
excused herself for a moment. Enter
ing the room, she found her father
reading a newspaper, and, with a twin
kle in her eyes, said;
"Oh, father, John wants to see your
new shotgun. I was just telling him
about it. Won’t you show it to him?”
Now, father had just purchased a
new gun, and, with natural pride, seiz
ed it and started toward the young
man at the door.
John got a glimpse of father and the
gun, and one glimpse was ail he need
ed. He shot out of that house with
such speed that had he been an automo
bile a regulation speedometer would
have been unable to keep tap on him.
"What’s the matter with that crank;
is he crazy?” exclaimed father.
Daughter merely laughed.
Now, Mary is trying to extricate her
self from her joke.
Newspaper men in a large city of the
Middle West have had a difficult time
trying to elicit political information
from a certain politician in that town,
who in answer to all questions invari
ably offers the stereotyped response,
"I am out of politics.”
Inasmuch as the man is an important
figure in the local political turmoil, this
response is not taken seriously by the in
terviewers, to whom, indeed, its re
peated utterance has become monot
onous.
Not long ago a veteran reporter suc
ceeded in gaining the presence of the
politician, to whom he put the query,
"What’s going on in politics?”
"Oh, I’m out of politics,” was the
answer.
"That’s understood, of course,”
quickly responded the scribe. "Would
you mind letting us know what pro
gress you’re making toward breaking
in again?”
A well-known burglar was recently
tried in a county in Missouri. Among
his counsel was a young attorney, for
whom, despite his youth and inexpe
rience, the accused had acquired a i
great liking, and whom he had insisted
upon retaining to assist in the defense.
"About how long do you think I I
ought to make my speech to the jury?”
asked the youthful expounder of the
law to associate counsel.
"I should say about two hours,” sug
gested the other.
"Two hours? Why,” exclaimed the
young attorney, "I thought that half
an hour would he quite sufficient.”
“It’s this way,” explained the other
lawyer. "They can’t sentence him
until you’ve finished, and of course the
longer you talk the longer he’ll he out
of jail.”
whence it came, nor how—whether it
is a spark from a comet’s tail, or a
crystallized drop squeezed in some
horrible intensity of fiery convulsion
from the white-hot insurgent heart of
the earth. Nobody knows much about
it at all, except that it doesn’t “be
long” to this world.
Some known black diamonds literally
were from the skies. They came im
bedded in meteorites cast upon Arizona
and Chili by an unidentified star. One
does not prospect for chips of stars.
| As well search for the end of the rain-
I bow. Neither is it practical to hammer
! all sorts of eruptive rock and con-
| glomerate wherever come upon. Earth*
i quake or volcanic upheaval districts
are not, necessarily, the most promis
ing, for often diamonds that seem to
have had volcanic origin occur thou
sands of miles from the probable place
of extrusion—carried thence, it is as
sumed, by glacial drift in some far
back geological time.
A lawyer once asked a man who had
at various times sat on several juries:
“Who influenced you most—the law
yers, the witnesses or the judges?”
He expected to get some useful and
interesting information from so ex
perienced a juryman. This was the
man’s reply:
"I tell yer, sir, ’ow I makes up my
mind. I am a plain man, and a rea
sonin’ man, and I ain’t influenced by
anything the lawyers say, nor by what
the witnesses say—no, nor by what the
Judge says.
“I just look at the man in the dock,
and I says: ‘If he ain’t done nothing,
why is he there?’ And I brings ’em
all in guilty.”
A Baltimore teacher was trying to
explain the meaning of the word "re
cuperate.”
"Charley,” she said, "when night
comes your father returns home tired
and worn out, doesn’t he?”
"Yes, ma’am,” assented Charley.
“Then, ” continued the teacher, "it
being night, and he being tired, what
does he do?”
“That’s what ma wants to know,”
said Charley.
Ilk..
Malaria is due to impurities and poisons in the blood. Instead of being
rich, strong and healthy, the circulation has become infected with germs of
disease which destroy the rich, red corpuscles that furnish nourishment and
strength to the body, and reduced this vital fluid to such a weak, watery-
condition that it is no longer able to keep the system in health, or ward of?
the countless diseases and disorders that assail it. The loss of these
red corpuscles takes the color and glow of healtli from the cheek, and we
see pale, sallow facer, and washed out, chalky complexions among the first
symptoms of Malaria. But Malaria is a general systemic disease, and as
tiie blood becomes more heavily loaded wit'A its germs we have more serious
and complicated symptoms ; the impure blood having its effect on all parts
of the body. The appetite fails, digestion is weakened, chills and slight
fever are frequent, and the sufferer loses energy and ambition because of a
constant tired-out and “ no account ” feeling. The. lack of necessary nour
ishment and healthful qualities in
During 1900 I was running a farm on
the Mississippi river and became so impreg
nated with Malaria that for a year I was
almost a physical wreck. I tried a number
of medicines recommended as blood purifi
ers, chill cures, and Malaria eradicators,
but nothing did me any good until I began
to use S. S. S. The result was that after
taking it for awhile I was as well and
strong as I ever was. I have never had a
chill since nor the slightest symptom of
Malaria. I hope others will be benefited
by my experience, and with that end in
view I give this testimonial, knowing that
S. S. S. is the best remedy for Malaria.
Amory, Miss. S. R. COWLEY.
the blood causes boils and abscesses,
skin affections, and in some cases
sores and ulcers to break out, and
Sometimes the patient is prostrated
with a spell of malarial fever which
may leave his healtli permanently
impaired. To cure Malaria both a
blood purifier and tonic are necessary,
in order to remove the cause and at
the same time build up the system
from its weakened and run-down
condition. S. S. S. is the medicine
best fitted for this work. It is the
most perfect of all blood purifiers, and
the purely vegetable ingredients of
which it is composed make it the
greatest and safest of all tonics.
S. S. S. goes down into the circulation and removes every trace of impurity
or poison, and at the same time gives to the blood the health-sustaining qual
ities it needs. It cures Malaria thoroughly and permanently because it
removes the germs and poisons which produce the disease, and while doing
this tones up and strengthens every part of the system. When S. S. S. has
cleansed the blood the symptoms pass away, the healthy color returns to
the complexion, the old tired, depressed feeling is gone, and the entire health
is renewed. Book with information about Malaria and any medical advice-
free. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., ATLANTA, GA.
HEALTH
BNSURANCE
The man who insures his life is
wise for his family.
The man who insures his health
is wise both for his family and
himself.
You may insure health by guard
ing it. it is worth guarding.
At the first attack of disease,
which generally approaches
through the LIVER and mani
fests itself in innumerable ways
TAKE —
TitfsPills
And save your health.
Newnan Hardware Co.
Seasonable Goods
Garden Hose
Freezers, Lawn Mowers
Screen Doors
Screen Windows
Fruit Jars
Preserving Kettles
Milk Coolers
Jar Rubbers
Jelly Glasses
Tin Fruit Cans
Blue, White and Gray Enameled Ware
We are right here with the goods.
’Phone us your order.
Newnan Hardware Co.,
GREENVILLE STREET,
Telephone 146.
The fundamental, underlying reason
why an infant cries is because it has
nothing else to do. It cannot swear.
It cannot go out on the front porch and
smoke. It cannot say, ‘‘Hurry up with
dinner,” or‘‘For goodness sake shut off
the heat.” It cannot move its arms or
legs with any degree of accuracy. It
has nothing to work with but its cry.
It uses this cry, therefore, as a com
plaint, a request, a protest, an exercise,
a recreation, a threat, a conversation,
a soliloquy and a voice culture.
MAKES RAPID HEADWAY.
Add This Fact to Your Store of
Knowledge.
Kidney disease advances so rapidly
that many a person is firmly in its grasp
before aware of its progress. Prompt
attention should he given the slightest
symptom of kidney disorder. If there
is a dull pain in the back, headache,
dizzy spells or a tired, worn-out feeling,
or if the urine is dark, foul-smelling, ir
regular and attended with pain, procure
a good kidney remedy at once.
Your townspeople recommend Doan’s
Kidney Pills. Read the statement of
this Newnan citizen:
C. L. Baker, 112 Jackson St., New
nan, Ga., says: "Riding over rough
roads has been a severe strain on my
kidneys, and as a result I suffered off
and on for years fnm a dull aching in
my back. The kidney secretions were
also disordered and from this l realized
that my kidneys were in an unhealthy
condition. A short time ago I learned
about Doan's Kidney Pills and procur
ing a box at Peniston’s drug store 1
began their use. They relieved me
promptly and I am sure it will not be
long before every symptom of kidney
trouble will he banished from my sys
tem.”
For sale by all dealers. Price 50
cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo,
New York, sole agents for the United
States.
Remember the name—Doan’s—and
take no other.
APPLICATION FOR BANK CHARTER.
GEORGIA-Coweta County:
To the Honorable Philip Cook, Secretary of
State, Atlanta, Ga.:
The undersigned, whose names, signed by each
of them, and residences are hereto attached, bring
this our petition, in pursuance of an Act of the
General Assembly of the State of Georgia, ap
proved Dec. 20. 1893. and Acts amendatory there
of. and respectfully show:
1. That we desire to form a corporation for the
purpose of carrying on the business of banking.
2. The name and style of tile proposed corpora
tion shall be
BAlNK OF RAYMOND.
3. The location and principal place of business
shall he the town of Raymond, county of Cowe
ta and State of Georgia.
■1 Tiie amount of capital stock is TWENTY-
FIVE THOUSAND DOLLARS, (*25.000). divided
into two hundred and fifty shares of $100 each.
3. The nature of the proposed corporation shall
be that of a hank, with continuous succession for
the term of thirty years, with the right of renew
al for a like term. To sue and be sued. To have
and use a common seal, and at pleasure to alter
the same. To appoint such officers and agents as
the business of the corporation requires, prescribe
their duties, fix their compensation, and removi
them at pleasure. To make such by-laws as ma:
he necessary or proper for the managemc nt of it
property and regulation of its alfairs. To hold,
purchase, dispose of and convey such real ant
personal property as may be necessary for its use:
and business. To discount bills, notes or othe:
evidences of debt; to receive and pay out deposits
with or without interest: to receive on special de'
posit money or bullion or foreign coins, or stock:
or bonds or other securities; to buy or sell foreigr
or domestic exchange, or other negotiable paper;
to lend money upon personal security, or upon
pledges of bonds, stocks or negotiable securities
to take and receive security by mortgage, or oth
erwise. on property, real or personal: and gener
ally to do and perform ail such other matters and
things not hereinbefore enumerated as are or may
be incident to the business of banking.
We herewith enclose the charter fee of $50, and
pray to be incorporated under the laws of this
State. J. G. WITCHER. Raymond. Ga..
.Signed) G. J. THOMAS. Raymond. Ga.,
E. .1. BAILEY, Sharpshurg. Ga..
TOBE DONEGAN. Raymond. Ga..
.1. R. HERRING. Newnan, Ga.,
L. C. MEGEE. Raymond. Ga.,
W. E. MEGEE. Raymond, Ga..
Petitioners.
GEORGIA—Coweta County :
Before me. personally appeared the undersigned
petitioners, who on oath depose and say that $15,000
of the capital subscribed to the Bank of Raymond.
Raymond. Ga., for which bank deponents are now-
seeking incorporation by the Secretary of State,
has actually been paid by the subscribers, and
that the same is in fact held and is to be used sole-
]y for the business and purposes of the said cor
potation. J. G. WITCHER,
G. J. THOMAS,
F. .1. BAILEY.
TOBE DONEGAN.
J. R. HERRING.
L. C. MEGEE.
W. E. MEGEE.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 23d day
of July. 1909. L. A. PERDUE.
tsEAL) Ordinary Coweta county.
STATE OF GEORGIA. '
Office of Secretary of State, i
I, Philip Cook. Secretary of State of the State
of Georgia, do hereby certify that the two (2)
pages of printed and typew-ritten matter hereto
attached contain a true and correct copy of the
application of the incorporators of tiie Bank of
Raymond for charter, as original of same appears
of file in this office.
In Testimony Whereof. I have hereunto set
my hand and affixed the seal of ray office, at the
Capitol, in the City of Atlanta, this 24th day of
July, in the year of our Lord One Thousand Nine
Hundred and Nine, and of the Independence of
the United States of America the One Hundred
and Thirty-fourth. PHILIP COOK.
Secretary of State.
Orange, Amber
and Red Top
Sorghum Seed
WE HAVE RECEIVED LARGE
MENTS OF EACH VARIETY.
RECLEANED, WITHOUT TRASH.
SEE US BEFORE BUYING. WE’LL
SAVE YOU MONEY.
A^large quantity of Unknown Peas for sale.
M. C. Farmer
& Company
SHIP-
NICE,
A Wheel Of f
COPYRiCHT
Or any of the numberless mis
haps that occur to the best
of vehicles in consequence, of
bad roads, or careless driving
can be repaired in the best
manner, durably and efficient
at E. R. Dent's repair shops.
Our work always gives
thorough satisfaction, as the
testimony of our former pat
rons shows. We also make the
best buggy sold in Newnan.
E. R. DENT